Islamic supremacism on the march. Note the details of the incident -- two Muslimas refuse to wear helmets over their hijab. Helmets are mandatory in the rink, like it or not. When I bike ride or rollerblade I have to wear a helmet; I don't want to, but I have to. If I get on a motorcycle, I have to wear a helmet. I don't want to but these are the rules.

But that's for the kuffar, the infidel. This is Islamic supremacism, special rights for special classes. These demands are daily and part of a much larger agenda.

What's all the more galling in this case is that the safety of others is irrelevant. The roller skating rink in Connecticut is standing behind its decision to ask a Muslim woman to remove her headscarf because it could present a danger to skaters if it fell off. (More here)

Rodriguez-Colon said she felt “mortified” when an employee at a rink asked her to wear a helmet on top of her religious headscarf, or hijab.

But Jennifer Conde, the operations manager at the Ron-A-Roll, said the rink’s main priority is the safety of its patrons.

“We are not insensitive to people’s religion,” she said. “We just focus on safety

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Islamic supremacism on the march. Note the details of the incident -- two Muslimas refuse to wear helmets over their hijab. Helmets are mandatory in the rink, like it or not. When I bike ride or rollerblade I have to wear a helmet; I don't want to, but I have to. If I get on a motorcycle, I have to wear a helmet. I don't want to but these are the rules.

But that's for the kuffar, the infidel. This is Islamic supremacism, special rights for special classes. These demands are daily and part of a much larger agenda.

What's all the more galling in this case is that the safety of others is irrelevant. The roller skating rink in Connecticut is standing behind its decision to ask a Muslim woman to remove her headscarf because it could present a danger to skaters if it fell off. (More here)

Rodriguez-Colon said she felt “mortified” when an employee at a rink asked her to wear a helmet on top of her religious headscarf, or hijab.

But Jennifer Conde, the operations manager at the Ron-A-Roll, said the rink’s main priority is the safety of its patrons.

“We are not insensitive to people’s religion,” she said. “We just focus on safety